
But Klima responded: "I'm sure you'd do that for me. But by then I'd already have gone out of my mind with uncertainty and fear. In this kind of thing I'm the
biggest coward, and what I need most of all is certainty."
They all agreed with this. The guitarist's proposal was good in principle, but it was not for everyone. It was especially not advisable for a man with weak nerves. Nor was it recommended for a famous, rich man whom women considered worth the trouble of rushing into a very risky venture. So the band shifted to the opinion that, instead of brushing off the young woman, he should persuade her to have an abortion. But what arguments should he use? They considered three basic possibilities:
The first method was to appeal to the young woman's compassionate heart: Klima would talk to the nurse as to his closest friend; he would confide in her sincerely; he would tell her his wife was seriously ill and would die if she were to learn that her husband had a child by another woman; that both from the moral point of view and because of the state of his nerves, he would be unable to bear such a situation; and he would beg the nurse for mercy.
This method came up against an objection in principle. You could not base an entire strategy on something as dubious, as uncertain, as the nurse's kindliness. Unless she had a really good and compassionate heart, the maneuver would backfire. She would be all the more aggressive because of the insult of the elected father of her child showing such excessive regard for another woman.
A second method was to appeal to the young
woman's good sense: Klima would try to explain to her that he was not and never could be certain the child was really his.
